Thursday, April 29, 2010

Om-nom-nom


Kittens are gaining weight nicely. They are all over 2lbs. Our usual goal is over 1000 grams (2.2lbs) since they often loose a little when they go back to the society and we don't want them dropping below 2lbs. 1000 is also a nice round number to aim for, since we actually measure their weight in grams and not pounds.

Three of this litter are there handily, and Lily probably is since now--she was 996 last night before we put out wet food.

They are not picky eaters. They eat any of the wet food I put out and I'm having to watch the dry food bowl carefully since they keep eating it empty. Lily especially seems to eat a lot of dry--which is probably why she's gaining faster than the rest, she just started smaller.

They share the wet food nicely with each other; to argue about it would require stopping eating!

Monday, April 26, 2010

Recovery = energy

The kittens are recovering nicely. They have adjusted to the room and the meds are working as they have a lot of spunk and energy (when they aren't sleeping). They're also eating better--the first night they didn't eat much wet food when I put it out but now they are demolishing the plate and also eating quite a bit of dry food. Their weights have started going up rapidly; barring any unexpected issues, they will be back at the society this weekend ready for spay/neuter and adoption.

They got a lot of outside air this weekend. We didn't take them out, and in fact had the window in the kitten room closed most the time to help keep it warm. However, for most of the weekend we had no front door. We made sure the kitten area was well secure--one getting loose in the house is bad enough, we had visions of them loose in the yard! Fortunately, no escapees and we have a new door installed.





Lily: The only female. She mews sadly until you sit where she can climb on you. She just finished drinking when we picked her up for the picture. She's the smallest by a little bit.


Jackson: The easy to tell apart kitten. He's the only kitten who isn't thrilled by people. He isn't afraid of us, but he doesn't seem interested in interacting either. We're working on convincing him people are good things and he should come say hi when they come in the room. He does like to chase his own tail and caught a spider the other day.


Chester is the lightest (by a little bit) coloring of the kittens. He's also the most rambunctious and hasn't seen a tail he didn't want to chase. He's getting a lot of lessons from his littermates in bite inhibition when they howl after he grabs their tail. He just loves to play.

Jamal is a cuddler. His eyes are looking better after a few days on medication and he joins the rest of the litter in racing about crazily. He likes people, and his purr is impressively loud.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

KITTENS!



I didn't realize it had been over a month since we posted. That's because it's been over a month since we had a foster. While it makes the blog a bit slow, it's a good thing overall since it means CCHS hasn't had too many sick cats.

However, it's kitten season, and so it was just a matter of time.It's been a long time since we've had little kittens so we were pleased to get the mail. They came into the society very recently at 8 weeks old--old enough to be adoptable, but a couple were a bit under the 2lbs needed for spay/neutering so they are in foster for a week or so to bulk them up.

That's what we knew yesterday afternoon--we thought we were just getting four kittens with the normal dietary supplement med who just needed some time. Their full exam this morning turned up other problems--one kitten has an eye infection, they all have congestion and diarrhea. So we're home with 3 bottles of liquid and one cream. I'm not surprised they are congested--picking them up they don't feel like they've been cleaning themselves, which we see a lot with stuffy cats.

Jackson is the black and white kitten with Jamal who has the eye problem. The pair of oranges are Lily (the only female) and Chester. We took the collar off Jackson since we can easily ID him and he was scratching at it a lot. The orange kittens will keep their collars until (if) we can spot coloring differences that are easy to spot.

While they've spent most of the day asleep we do know somethings about them already. Lily is adventuresome and has no fear. She was first out of the crate and went exploring and is already studying the door. The others seem a bit more reserved, but they all like people--at least I had them all trying to sleep on me at one point and when they were meowing at Jon for attention whenever they woke up.